EFTA01877486.pdf
dataset_10 PDF 159.2 KB • Feb 4, 2026 • 1 pages
Studies Showing how Parkinson's is Alleviated by Music Receives Funding from Ilan and
University and Philanthropist. Jeffrey Epstein
A recent clinical trial conducted by The Institute for Music and Brain Science at Harvard
University on the positive effects of music on Parkinson's disease, has received substantial
support from science activist, Jeffrey Epstein and his foundation, The Jeffrey Epstein VI
Foundation. The study was conducted with the Department of Neurology at Massachusetts
General Hospital and Harvard Medical School.
The trial evaluated the effects of ambient music on a group of Parkinson's patients with severe to
mild symptoms. Specifically, the study looked at visuomotor integration, rapid alternating
movements (RAM's) and gait. Twenty trials per category were conducted and measured in
milliseconds. The music had a strong metrical rhythm and medium tempos confined to a range of
128 to 192 beats per minute. Control test conditions were either silence or asymmetrical
instrumental music. The results were encouraging: in the visuomotor tests, 40% of those with
mild Parkinson's were significantly faster with ambient music. In the RAM tests, 83% of those
with moderate Parkinson's showed faster results. In the gait tests, 25% of those with moderate
Parkinson's showed faster and larger strides.
"More studies need to be done to substantiate the notion that music improves motor
coordination," Jeffrey Epstein asserted. "However, these studies help reveal how areas in the
auditory cortex are affected and therefore, to what extent we can duplicate the stimulus."
The Jeffrey Epstein VI Foundation is a long standing supporter of science research at Harvard
University. In 2003, it gave a $30 million grant to Harvard to establish the Program for
Evolutionary Dynamics, the first of its kind to study evolutionary biology from a mathematical
point of view.
Founded by Dr. Mark Tramo, the Institute for Music and Brain Science seeks to advance
knowledge about the neurological impact of music, to combat neurological and other diseases,
using music as a lens into the brain and as a rehabilitator, and to develop music technology that
enhances intellectual growth, brain recovery, and mental health. Dr. Tramo is an Associate
Professor of Neurology at Harvard Medical School and Attending Neurologist at Massachusetts
General Hospital. He is the recipient of numerous awards for original research on the
neuroanatomy and neurophysiology of music perception and cognition, from the National
Institute on Deafness and Communication Disorders, National Institute of Neurological Diseases
and Stroke, McDonnell-Pew Program in Cognitive Neuroscience and the National Organization
for Hearing Research.
EFTA_R1_00287550
EFTA01877486
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